Here’s top of the Innotune blog of January.
Get to know controllerism. Can we compare digital DJs and controllerists? Read on and share your opinion.
You may also read about sampling and pick up a few tricks from the Prodigy classic “Smack my bitch up”.
This month we gathered 20 great EDMÂ music videos. Check out both part 1 and part 2.
Ableton and Serato finally launched the first result of their cooperation. Ville Lope wrote about the DJ system “The Bridge” and gave you his first thoughts.
The fifth episode of the Innotune podcast featured Thomas Sagstad, BT, Sami Saari, Dj Eco, Pete Tong and Funkagenda. Plus new music from other great producers. Download, listen or subscribe to our monthly podcast.
January at Innotune also brought you mouth producing, game trance, free nu disco downloads and the true story about the A&R guy.
Stay tuned!
Turntablism is mostly for hiphoppers, right? But the concept of controllerism might fit better into the electronic scene. We have moved into an era where the Mac-lit DJ is more common than the jock playing plastic plates. Since anyone can make flawless beatmixes with cheap gear now, you have to give credit to those digital artists that take more creative use of computers and its controllers.
From Wikipedia: Controllerism is the art and practice of using musical software controllers (e.g. MIDI, OSC, Joystick, etc) to build upon, mix, scratch, remix, effect, modify, or otherwise create music, usually by a Digital DJ or “Controllerist”.
The gear manufacturers are throwing out a lot of controllers for DAWs and digital DJ’ing, but real controllerists create their own equipment. Now you might argue that this extreme use of controllers is relevant only for artists performing live electronic music. But isn’t computer DJ’ing based on pretty much the same?
Continue Reading "Are you a DJ or a controllerist?"...